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    Child Abuse: parental rights and the interests of the child
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 7 (2): 183-194. 1990.
    I criticise the ‘liberal’view of the proper relationship between the family and State, namely that, although the interests of the child should be paramount, parents are entitled to rights of both privacy and autonomy which should be abrogated only when the child suffers a specifiable harm. I argue that the right to bear children is not absolute, and that it only grounds a right to rear upon an objectionable proprietarian picture of the child as owned by its producer. If natural parents have any …Read more
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    Politics and Morality – By Susan Mendus
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 27 (4): 429-431. 2010.
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    Radical Philosophy 56 44. 1990.
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    Radical Philosophy 58. 1991.
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    What should judges do?
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    Can child abuse be defined?
    In Michael King (ed.), Moral agendas for children's welfare, Taylor & Francis. pp. 74-89. 1999.
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    Hearing the child
    with Marit Skivenes
    Child and Family Social Work 14 (4): 391-399. 2009.
    Given that in our view the child has a fundamental right to be heard in all collective deliberative processes determining his or her future, we set out, firstly, what is required of such processes to respect this right – namely that the child's authentic voice is heard and makes a difference – and, secondly, the distance between this ideal and practice exemplified in the work of child welfare and child protection workers in Norway and the UK, chiefly in their display of an instrumental attitude …Read more